Positive U.S. economic surprise indices, which had been gradually easing back from post-pandemic highs through late summer, are pushing back higher again just as disappointingly negative euro zone equivalents turn lower. And the gap between those two gauges, which had halved from July peaks, is starting to yawn wider yet again.
Part of the drag on Europe is the ailing Chinese economy, its ongoing property bust and its contracting industrial sector.
Although the steep annual drop in Chinese exports and imports last month was marginally better than forecast, the ongoing funk in activity remains stark and threatens Beijing’s overall economic growth target of about 5%.
Wednesday’s news of another miss in German industrial production in July illustrated the ripple effects in Europe of troubles in the world’s second biggest economy – and a resurgent crude oil price as winter hoves into view will unnerve both.
The contrast with a re-accelerating U.S. economy is stark.
The latest data saw U.S. interest rate futures go back to a 50-50 stance on whether the Fed has one last hike left in the tank. Although slightly off the week’s highs on Thursday, U.S. Treasury yields remained pumped up.
And hovering just below six-month highs on Thursday, the dollar’s index against the world’s most traded currencies has now risen for six days in a row – a rise of almost 5.5% since the middle of July.
With Bank of England boss Andrew Bailey indicating on Wednesday that UK rate hikes are nearly done, the pound took most of the heat over the past 24 hours and hit three-month lows against the dollar.
The dollar also hit six-month highs against the Canadian dollar on Wednesday after the Bank of Canada left its policy rates on hold too.
With China’s yuan recording its lowest close on domestic markets since 2007, weakness in the offshore unit has remerged too.
Annual changes in Brent crude oil prices, meantime, turned positive for the first time since January as spot prices climbed following this week’s decision by Saudi Arabia and Russia to extend output cuts.
Attention now shifts back to what Fed policymakers make of this U.S. growth pickup, the rebound in energy prices and some mixed signals from the tight labor market.
At least six senior Fed officials are in speaking engagements later on Thursday – including Fed board member Michelle Bowman and New York Fed chief John Williams.
The Fed’s Beige Book of economic conditions released on Wednesday appeared relatively relaxed about both the activity and inflation picture. The weekly jobless update later on Thursday is the most immediate focus on the data front.
Shares in China, Japan and across Asia were in the red again on Thursday and U.S. stock futures marked further losses on Wall Street at the open. Europe’s bourses steadied after initially dipping for the seventh session in a row.
Shares of Apple fell another 2.5% premarket on reports China is seeking to broaden an iPhone ban to state firms and agencies. Apple shed 3.6% on Wednesday on news Beijing had banned officials at just central government agencies from using its handsets.